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David Akui

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Years of service
  
1940–1945

Battles and wars
  
World War II


Name
  
David Akui

Battles/wars
  
World War II

Rank
  
Master sergeant

David Akui httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbd

Allegiance
  
United States of America

Died
  
September 15, 1987, Kaneohe, Hawaii, United States

Service/branch
  
United States Army

Status galau david akui kangen istri cumicam 18 mei 2016


David M. Akui (January 16, 1920 - September 15, 1987) was an American soldier who became famous for capturing the first Japanese prisoner of war in World War II. At the time, Akui was a corporal in Company G, 298th Infantry Regiment of the Hawaii National Guard.

Contents

Biography

This section appears to be missing information. If you have a reliable source that documents the rest of his life, please add it in.

Hawaiian native Akui enlisted on 15 October 1940 and would serve in the Pacific theater until its end.

On December 8, 1941, the morning after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Akui was walking along Waimanalo Beach, accompanied by Lieutenant Paul C. Plybon. Akui found an Asian man lying unconscious on the beach. The man awakened to find Akui standing over him with a drawn pistol. Akui took the man into custody and he was identified as Ensign Kazuo Sakamaki, commander of a two-man midget submarine that took part in the Pearl Harbor attacks. Ensign Sakamaki's submarine's gyrocompass was malfunctioning and caused the submarine to sail in circles at periscope depth. Sakamaki thus ran aground on a reef, where the United States Navy destroyer USS Helm spotted it and opened fire. The destroyer's gunners missed, but the blasts freed the submarine from the reef and Sakamaki was able to submerge. When he could not repair the gyrocompass, Sakamaki ordered Petty Officer 2nd Class Inagaki Kiyoshi to swim ashore, while he set the demolition charges to destroy the submarine. Sakamaki then abandoned ship himself. Kiyoshi drowned attempting to swim ashore. Sakamaki succeeded, but passed out from exhaustion. Corporal Akui found him there. Sakamaki's demolition charges failed to explode and his submarine also washed ashore. It was salvaged and is now in the Admiral Nimitz Museum at Fredericksburg, Texas.

Akui served through the remainder of the war in the Pacific Theater and was a member of the famed "Merrill's Marauders", who fought the Japanese in the jungles of Burma. He retired from the United States Army as a master sergeant and spent the rest of his life in Hawaii. He died in Kaneohe, Honolulu in 1987 at the age of 67.

References

David Akui Wikipedia